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Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention
24

Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

Jan 17, 2018

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Basil McCoy

“The Father of the Constitution” James Madison Attended every meeting & busily took notes Studied law, history, & government Drew from philosopher Jean Jacques Rousseau
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Page 1: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

Chapter 5Section 2: The Constitutional

Convention

Page 2: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

The Convention AssemblesMay 1787Known as the Constitutional ConventionProduced the US Constitution55 delegates from all states except RI

Page 3: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

“The Father of the Constitution”

James MadisonAttended every meeting & busily took notesStudied law, history, & governmentDrew from philosopher Jean Jacques Rousseau

Page 4: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

Through proper government, humans could take control of themselves & their world & improve the condition of both

Page 5: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

Divisions at the Convention

Elected Washington as President by unanimous voteMajor division was amending the Articles or abandoning them all together

If to get rid of them, they would have to over step their powers- that’s what they did

Page 6: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

The Virginia PlanSubmitted by Edmund RandolphBicameral legislature based on populationProvisions

Legislature would have added powers- right to tax & regulate foreign & interstate commerce

Page 7: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

Legislature would have veto powerGovernment would have an executive & judicial branch too

Page 8: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

New Jersey PlanProposed by William PattersonFeatures

Congress had the power to tax & regulate foreign & interstate commerceCreate executive & judicial branches

Page 9: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

Every state would have an equal vote in a unicameral Congress

Aimed to keep state government more powerful

Page 10: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

Reaching AgreementsThe Great Compromise

Introduced by Roger Sherman of Connecticut & Oliver Ellsworth

Page 11: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

Legislative branch made up of 2 houses

Senate- Equal representation 2 per stateHouse of Representatives- Based upon populationApproved July 16, 1787

Page 12: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

The Three Fifths Compromise

Should slaves be included in the population count?South would have great power in the House3/5 of a state’s slave population would be counted

Page 13: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

A Lasting DocumentFinal draft approved September 17, 1787Many strengths to help it endureFlexible to adaptAmendments (How many?)Many nations have modeled their governments after the US

Page 14: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

Government StructureFederal & State Powers

Federal system of governmentReserved powers- reserved for the statesDelegated powers- delegated to the Federal governmentConcurrent powers- shared

Page 15: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

Separation of Federal Powers

Separation of powersEach branch has its own area of authority but no one branch has complete power over the government

Checks & balancesPrevents tyranny

Page 16: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

CongressPreserved & limited the people’s control over the governmentHouse is directly responsible to the people2 year term

Page 17: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

SenateOriginally elected by state legislaturesChanged in 1913 by 17th amendment6 year termsEvery 2 years 1/3 of the Senate is reelected

Page 18: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

Less influence of popular opinionAdvise & consent to the President with regard to treaties & judicial appointments

Page 19: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

Can coin money, declare war, raise an army, provide for a navy, & regulate commerce“Elastic clause” Necessary & proper

Page 20: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

The PresidentTerm is 4 years & could be reelected as many times as wished

2 term limit set by the 22nd Amendment in 1951

Page 21: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

President is chosen by a group of electors from each state

Number of CongressmenElectoral College

House is the final decision maker if no one wins the vote

Vote until one candidate receives majority

Page 22: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

PowersCommander in chief of armed forces, power to veto Congress, choose judges for the national courts

Page 23: Chapter 5 Section 2: The Constitutional Convention.

Federal CourtsRemoval of judges is difficult so people can’t control themHold office for life, unless they act dishonestly

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The Road AheadConstitution required the approval of 9 out of the 13 states